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Volume Number: | 11 | |||
Issue Number: | 2 | |||
Column Tag: | The Inquisitive Programmer |
A Quick Trip Into the Depths
ResError Considered Harmful?
by Steve Jasik, Menlo Park, CA, macnosy@netcom.com
Note: Source code files accompanying article are located on MacTech CD-ROM or source code disks.
Nosy is over 10 years old, having been introduced to the world in Nov ’84 and first shipped in Jan ’85. It has been a few years since I have written an article for MacTech. Since ’84, the Mac has become more powerful than the mainframes I used to work on, and the system has advanced in utility and complexity. Nosy hasn’t changed too much, and some pseudo alternatives to it, such as the ResEdit CODE Editor have come along, but I used it recently to get the global view of a piece of the ROM.
The particular example I’ll show here came to me as a bug in my debugger that showed up on a IIfx running System 7.5. After some investigation, it turned out that the problem was some less-than-robust code in Sound Manager 3.0. The crux of the problem was that, despite what Inside Macintosh or today’s equivalent of it says, the Resource Manager doesn’t always return a non-zero value of ResErr when it doesn’t find a requested resource. More on this later.
The original problem presented to me was that a user was trying to debug an INIT and my debugger was barfing. To find the bug, I set up my normal debugger bug-finding environment, in which I run two copies of my Debugger.
The first one debugs the second one, and if both fail, I have Macsbug running “behind” the first one. For the curious, the magic behind having one debugger debug a second copy of itself is to do a complete context switch of low memory, which includes the exception vectors (0-$FF) and the Macintosh globals ($100-$1E00) when entering The Debugger.
Using this method, I found that someone was trying to do a _CloseResFile on me. It took a few hours to trace it back into the Sound Manager.
At this point let me mention a trick I have used over the years to get a better grip on where one is in a random blowup. One of the most important pieces of information is the stack crawl. It answers the question of how and sometimes why the program is where it is. Many times the stack crawl is less than informative, and those who use Macsbug know well that the ROM part of it can be useless. Given this, how can we recover any information about how the program got to the point it is currently at? The basic answer is to try and repair the current address/bus error by fixing up a register or so (e.g. by putting $0 or $40801000 into the register which has a bus error value that the current instruction is attempting to read from or write to), advancing the Program Counter, and then carefully single stepping our way out of the current procedure and ‘up the stack’ so we can get an idea of where we came from.
In this case, this method worked for me, and I found myself in Sound Manager code, so the next problem was to get a decent disassembly of it so I could figure out why it was trying to do a CloseResFile.
After some disassembly work in Nosy, I found myself staring at the following two procedures, one which I have named open_Snd_Prefs :
open_Snd_Prefs B1B10: 4E56 FFB4 'NV..' LINK A6,#-$4C B1B14: 48E7 0308 'H...' MOVEM.L D6-D7/A4,-(A7) B1B18: 598F 'Y.' SUBQ.L #4,A7 B1B1A: 2F3C 5354 5220 '/<STR ' PUSH.L #'STR ' B1B20: 3F3C BF48 '?<.H' PUSH #$BF48 B1B24: A9A0 '..' _GetResource ; (theType:ResType; ID:INTEGER):Handle B1B26: 285F '(_' POP.L A4 B1B28: 200C ' .' MOVE.L A4,D0 B1B2A: 660A 10B1B36 BNE.S mnn_1 B1B2C: 558F 'U.' SUBQ.L #2,A7 B1B2E: A9AF '..' _ResError ; :OSErr B1B30: 3E1F '>.' POP D7 ; ROM returns ResErr = 0 !! ***** B1B32: 6000 0094 10B1BC8 BRA mnn_4 no error from RsrcMgr, so we exit with D0 = 0, but we haven't opened the Prefs file!!!! B1B36: 558F 'U.' mnn_1 SUBQ.L #2,A7 B1B38: 3F3C 8000 '?<..' PUSH #$8000 B1B3C: 2F3C 7072 6566 '/<pref' PUSH.L #'pref' B1B42: 7001 'p.' MOVEQ #1,D0 B1B44: 1F00 '..' PUSH.B D0 B1B46: 486E FFFE 200FFFE PEA wnn_4(A6) B1B4A: 486E FFFA 200FFFA PEA wnn_3(A6) B1B4E: 7000 'p.' MOVEQ #0,D0 B1B50: A823 '.#' _AliasMgr ; (D0/selector:INTEGER) B1B52: 3E1F '>.' POP D7 B1B54: 6672 10B1BC8 BNE.S mnn_4 B1B56: 204C ' L' MOVEA.L A4,A0 B1B58: A029 '.)' _HLock ; (A0/h:Handle) B1B5A: 558F 'U.' SUBQ.L #2,A7 B1B5C: 3F2E FFFE 200FFFE PUSH wnn_4(A6) B1B60: 2F2E FFFA 200FFFA PUSH.L wnn_3(A6) B1B64: 2F14 '/.' PUSH.L (A4) B1B66: 486E FFB4 200FFB4 PEA wnn_2(A6) B1B6A: 303C 0001 '0<..' MOVE #1,D0 B1B6E: AA52 '.R' _HighLvlFSDisptch ;(D0/selector:INTEGER) B1B70: 3E1F '>.' POP D7 B1B72: 0C47 FFD5 '.G..' CMPI #-43,D7 B1B76: 6622 10B1B9A BNE.S mnn_2 B1B78: 4A2E 000B 200000B TST.B param2(A6) B1B7C: 671C 10B1B9A BEQ.S mnn_2 B1B7E: 486E FFB4 200FFB4 PEA wnn_2(A6) B1B82: 2F3C 7361 6420 '/<sad ' PUSH.L #'sad ' B1B88: 2F3C 7072 6566 '/<pref' PUSH.L #'pref' B1B8E: 70FF 'p.' MOVEQ #-1,D0 B1B90: 3F00 '?.' PUSH D0 B1B92: 303C 000E '0<..' MOVE #14,D0 B1B96: AA52 '.R' _HighLvlFSDisptch B1B98: 4247 'BG' CLR D7 B1B9A: 4A47 'JG' mnn_2 TST D7 B1B9C: 662A 10B1BC8 BNE.S mnn_4 B1B9E: 558F 'U.' SUBQ.L #2,A7 B1BA0: 486E FFB4 200FFB4 PEA wnn_2(A6) B1BA4: 7003 'p.' MOVEQ #3,D0 B1BA6: 1F00 '..' PUSH.B D0 B1BA8: 303C 000D '0<..' MOVE #13,D0 B1BAC: AA52 '.R' _HighLvlFSDisptch B1BAE: 3C1F '<.' POP D6 B1BB0: 0C46 FFFF '.F..' CMPI #-1,D6 B1BB4: 6608 10B1BBE BNE.S mnn_3 B1BB6: 558F 'U.' SUBQ.L #2,A7 B1BB8: A9AF '..' _ResError ; :OSErr B1BBA: 3E1F '>.' POP D7 B1BBC: 600A 10B1BC8 BRA.S mnn_4 B1BBE: 206E 000C 200000C mnn_3 MOVEA.L param1(A6),A0 B1BC2: 3086 '0.' MOVE D6,(A0) B1BC4: 7000 'p.' MOVEQ #0,D0 B1BC6: 6002 10B1BCA BRA.S mnn_5 B1BC8: 3007 '0.' mnn_4 MOVE D7,D0 B1BCA: 4CEE 10C0 FFA8 200FFA8 mnn_5 MOVEM.L wnn_1(A6),D6-D7/A4 B1BD0: 4E5E 'N^' UNLK A6 B1BD2: 4E75 'Nu' RTS B1CA6: 4E56 FFFE 'NV..' proc4742 LINK A6,#-2 B1CAA: 48E7 0738 'H..8' MOVEM.L D5-D7/A2-A4,-(A7) B1CAE: 246E 000C 200000C MOVEA.L param2(A6),A2 B1CB2: 266E 0008 2000008 MOVEA.L param3(A6),A3 B1CB6: 7000 'p.' MOVEQ #0,D0 B1CB8: 1012 '..' MOVE.B (A2),D0 B1CBA: 4A80 'J.' TST.L D0 B1CBC: 6604 10B1CC2 BNE.S mnq_1 B1CBE: 7ECE '~.' MOVEQ #-50,D7 B1CC0: 6074 10B1D36 BRA.S mnq_6 B1CC2: 200B ' .' mnq_1 MOVE.L A3,D0 B1CC4: 6604 10B1CCA BNE.S mnq_2 B1CC6: 7ECE '~.' MOVEQ #-50,D7 B1CC8: 606C 10B1D36 BRA.S mnq_6 B1CCA: 558F 'U.' mnq_2 SUBQ.L #2,A7 B1CCC: A994 '..' _CurResFile ; :RefNum B1CCE: 3C1F '<.' POP D6 B1CD0: 486E FFFE 200FFFE PEA wnq_2(A6) B1CD4: 7000 'p.' MOVEQ #0,D0 B1CD6: 2F00 '/.' PUSH.L D0 B1CD8: 4EBA FE36 10B1B10 JSR open_Snd_Prefs B1CDC: 3E00 '>.' MOVE D0,D7 B1CDE: 504F 'PO' ADDQ #8,A7 B1CE0: 670A 10B1CEC BEQ.S mnq_3 ; if no error then get 'sysb' resource B1CE2: 3F06 '?.' PUSH D6 B1CE4: A998 '..' _UseResFile ; (frefNum:RefNum) B1CE6: 3D47 0014 2000014 MOVE D7,funRslt(A6) B1CEA: 604E 10B1D3A BRA.S mnq_7 B1CEC: 598F 'Y.' mnq_3 SUBQ.L #4,A7 B1CEE: 2F2E 0010 2000010 PUSH.L param1(A6) B1CF2: 2F0A '/.' PUSH.L A2 B1CF4: A820 '. ' _Get1NamedResource ; (theType:ResType; name:Str255):Handle B1CF6: 285F '(_' POP.L A4 B1CF8: 558F 'U.' SUBQ.L #2,A7 B1CFA: A9AF '..' _ResError ; :OSErr B1CFC: 3E1F '>.' POP D7 B1CFE: 200C ' .' MOVE.L A4,D0 B1D00: 660A 10B1D0C BNE.S mnq_4 ; oops, didn't get it, close the res file B1D02: 4A47 'JG' TST D7 B1D04: 6626 10B1D2C BNE.S mnq_5 B1D06: 3E3C FF40 '><.@' MOVE #$FF40,D7 B1D0A: 6020 10B1D2C BRA.S mnq_5 B1D0C: 204C ' L' mnq_4 MOVEA.L A4,A0 B1D0E: A025 '.%' _GetHandleSize ;(A0/h:Handle):D0\Size B1D10: 2A00 '*.' MOVE.L D0,D5 B1D12: 3E38 0220 $220 MOVE MemErr,D7 B1D16: 6614 10B1D2C BNE.S mnq_5 B1D18: 204B ' K' MOVEA.L A3,A0 B1D1A: 2005 ' .' MOVE.L D5,D0 B1D1C: A024 '.$' _SetHandleSize ;(A0/h:Handle; D0/newSize:Size) B1D1E: 3E38 0220 $220 MOVE MemErr,D7 B1D22: 6608 10B1D2C BNE.S mnq_5 B1D24: 2054 ' T' MOVEA.L (A4),A0 B1D26: 2253 '"S' MOVEA.L (A3),A1 B1D28: 2005 ' .' MOVE.L D5,D0 B1D2A: A22E '..' _BlockMove ;(A0/srcPtr,A1/destPtr:Ptr; B1D2C: 3F2E FFFE 200FFFE mnq_5 PUSH wnq_2(A6) B1D30: A99A '..' _CloseResFile ; (refNum:RefNum) B1D32: 3F06 '?.' PUSH D6 B1D34: A998 '..' _UseResFile ; (frefNum:RefNum) B1D36: 3D47 0014 2000014 mnq_6 MOVE D7,funRslt(A6) B1D3A: 4CEE 1CE0 FFE6 200FFE6 mnq_7 MOVEM.L q_1(A6),D5-D7/A2-A4 B1D40: 4E5E 'N^' UNLK A6 B1D42: 205F ' _' POP.L A0 B1D44: 4FEF 000C 'O...' LEA 12(A7),A7 B1D48: 4ED0 'N.' JMP (A0)
Referring to the procedure I named open_Snd_Prefs, it sets up a Link frame and calls _GetResource to get the value of a 'STR ' resource with id = BF48. I rummaged around the System file in Resorcerer and found that this string had the value of “Sound Prefs”. The code then checks to see that it gets the string, and the rest of the procedure uses the Alias Mgr, etc to attempt to find its prefs file somewhere in the system folder. Apparently this procedure exits with 0 if it has found and opened the prefs file or a non-zero return when it has not. The caller futzes around to get the value of some magic resource from it and then closes the prefs file via _CloseResFile. So how, you may ask, could anything go wrong with this simple code?
Well, my debugger disconnects itself from the System file. That is, inside my Debugger, the System file is not on the chain of resource files to be searched, and, in almost all cases, it contains copies of the necessary resources that would normally come from the System file. The reason for this is that an open resource file contains a field for each resource that points to the copy of it in memory when the resource is opened. In order to avoid having to switch the values of these fields when transitioning between The Debugger and user, I chose the time efficient method of duplicating the necessary resources inside my debugger.
With this fact in hand, lets look at open_Snd_Prefs again. In C the source code would look like:
OSErr open_Snd_Prefs() { handle h = GetResource('STR ',$BF48); // get name of Sound Prefs file if( ! h ) return( ResError ); // assumes the Resource Mgr returns a non-zero error { // locate and Open sound prefs file, ... return( 0 ) } }
As I mentioned at the beginning, the resource manager may return a NIL handle, but it rarely returns a non-zero value of ResError.
The upshot of all this is that the caller got a 0 error return and thought that the sound prefs file was open. When it did the Get1NamedResource, and it failed, it then tried to close the current resource file, which in this case was my Debugger, and things went to hell from there.
In retrospect, a more robust way to specify and code the routine might be to have it return the (FCB) refNum of the sound prefs file that it opened or 0. Then the logic in the calling proc would be somewhat cleaner and less subject to failure.
Rewriting, the revised code would be:
int open_Snd_Prefs() { int refNum = 0; handle h = GetResource('STR ',$BF48); // get name of Sound Prefs file if( h ) { // use Alias Mgr, etc to locate and open Sound Prefs resource file refNum = ?? // some value returned by HighLvlFSDisptch } return( refNum ) }
As a last thought, I suspect that the buggy version of the code has been distributed by DTS as sample code for you to use, and in my humble opinion, it leaves something to be desired. Not because it is intrinsically wrong, but because the Macintosh Resource Manager is inconsistent about returning a non-zero value of ResError.
Some Things That You Can Try At Home:
1) Search your code for ResError calls and convince yourself that they serve some purpose, or that you won’t do anything really stupid if it returns 0 when it should not.
2) If you are using a class library such as MacApp, Metrowerks PowerPlant or TCL, then search it for ResError calls.
3) Selectively remove resources from your product and see what kind of stupid things it does.
4) Selectively remove resources from some one else’s product and see what kind of stupid things it does. Submit bug reports.
An alternative title for this article could have been “ResError Considered Harmful”. During the language wars of the 60’s and 70’s, I believe that Dijkstra threw the first stone by writing an article in SIGPlan, the ACM’s Special Interest Group of Programming Languages titled “Goto Considered Harmful”. His thesis was that the use of the goto statement made for poor programming style, etc. Over the next few years, the wars escalated to the point where I suspect that someone wrote an article titled “Harmful Considered Harmful”.
[We welcome your comments, feedback, and debugging tales of woe and intrigue at editorial@xplain.com - Ed stb]

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